Polis has taken to the battlefield with three talks by journalists back from the frontline: A multi-media man who has been shot in the course of his work for the Guardian and others; a top TV camera journalist who runs his own production company and has made films for the likes of Newsnight as well as a documentary feature out next year; and an Iraqi who has worked through the recent war and now trains a new generation of journalists
Television audiences around the world were gripped by television news reporting of the events in Ira...
I have always admired journalists reporting from war zones. They seemed so courageous and utterly in...
Although war journalism has existed for centuries, changes in the nature of armed conflict and its c...
War has come to Polis in the shape of a course I teach at the London College of Communications. Afte...
Report on the Polis Panel at the LSE Literary Festival By Bjork Kjaernested People have always been ...
This blog by Polis Summer School student Reena Gurung is based on a talk by BBC News producer Stuart...
Probably the most dangerous role in modern journalism is that of the ‘War Correspondent’, but what d...
Reporting war is getting more dangerous, difficult and complicated but working with citizen journali...
It’s one of the paradoxes of the modern news media that it has never been more easy to report instan...
The price paid in lives by journalists to report from dangerous war zones and oppressive regimes kee...
We had our first POLIS public debate on Friday with Sir Malcolm Rifkind, the BBC’s David Loyn and Sk...
In 1876, an American newspaperman with the US 7th Cavalry, Mark Kellogg, declared: ‘I go with Custer...
Organisations like the International News Safety Institute (INSI), formed in 2001 and based in Bruss...
This article analyzes the transformation of War journalism overthe years and focuses on some of the ...
This chapter proposes to examine the emergent forms and practices of blogging as an augmentation of...
Television audiences around the world were gripped by television news reporting of the events in Ira...
I have always admired journalists reporting from war zones. They seemed so courageous and utterly in...
Although war journalism has existed for centuries, changes in the nature of armed conflict and its c...
War has come to Polis in the shape of a course I teach at the London College of Communications. Afte...
Report on the Polis Panel at the LSE Literary Festival By Bjork Kjaernested People have always been ...
This blog by Polis Summer School student Reena Gurung is based on a talk by BBC News producer Stuart...
Probably the most dangerous role in modern journalism is that of the ‘War Correspondent’, but what d...
Reporting war is getting more dangerous, difficult and complicated but working with citizen journali...
It’s one of the paradoxes of the modern news media that it has never been more easy to report instan...
The price paid in lives by journalists to report from dangerous war zones and oppressive regimes kee...
We had our first POLIS public debate on Friday with Sir Malcolm Rifkind, the BBC’s David Loyn and Sk...
In 1876, an American newspaperman with the US 7th Cavalry, Mark Kellogg, declared: ‘I go with Custer...
Organisations like the International News Safety Institute (INSI), formed in 2001 and based in Bruss...
This article analyzes the transformation of War journalism overthe years and focuses on some of the ...
This chapter proposes to examine the emergent forms and practices of blogging as an augmentation of...
Television audiences around the world were gripped by television news reporting of the events in Ira...
I have always admired journalists reporting from war zones. They seemed so courageous and utterly in...
Although war journalism has existed for centuries, changes in the nature of armed conflict and its c...